Abstract

Novel cultivation technologies demand the adaptation of existing analytical concepts. Metabolic flux analysis (MFA) requires stable-isotope labeling of biomass-bound protein as the primary information source. Obtaining the required protein in cultivation set-ups where biomass is inaccessible due to low cell densities and cell immobilization is difficult to date. We developed a non-disruptive analytical concept for 13C-based metabolic flux analysis based on secreted protein as an information carrier for isotope mapping in the protein-bound amino acids. This “metabolic flux probe” (MFP) concept was investigated in different cultivation set-ups with a recombinant, protein-secreting yeast strain. The obtained results grant insight into intracellular protein turnover dynamics. Experiments under metabolic but isotopically nonstationary conditions in continuous glucose-limited chemostats at high dilution rates demonstrated faster incorporation of isotope information from labeled glucose into the recombinant reporter protein than in biomass-bound protein. Our results suggest that the reporter protein was polymerized from intracellular amino acid pools with higher turnover rates than biomass-bound protein. The latter aspect might be vital for 13C-flux analyses under isotopically nonstationary conditions for analyzing fast metabolic dynamics.

Highlights

  • IntroductionFlux analysis has been proven to help analyze cellular redox states, allowing to identify cofactor regeneration capacities in energy-demanding biotransformations [5,6]

  • This observation could be attributed to the extracellular accumulation of averaged isotope labeling information, as secreted protein that did not reflect the usage of the actual metabolic network in H. polymorpha RB11 conphys [29,30]

  • We could successfully demonstrate the flux probe concept to be valid and yield similar intracellular flux distributions as with biomass under certain cultivation conditions; new and fundamental questions concerning intracellular processing of 13 C-isotopes arise from our results

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Summary

Introduction

Flux analysis has been proven to help analyze cellular redox states, allowing to identify cofactor regeneration capacities in energy-demanding biotransformations [5,6]

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